---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Second Call for Contributions and Participation
SIXTH STRATEGO USER DAYS (SUD'05)
May 2 - 4, 2005
Utrecht University
Utrecht, The Netherlands
http://www.stratego-language.org/Stratego/SixthStrategoUserDays
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
with preliminary list of presentations
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
SCOPE
The Stratego User Days are a yearly meeting of Stratego/XT developers
and users. Topics include
* The state of the Stratego language and toolset
* Ongoing developments
* Plans and requirements for the future
* Development tools and implementation techniques for transformation systems
* Compilers, interpreters, documentation generation
* Transformation components and their composition
* Deployment issues
* Benchmarking transformations and transformed programs
* Extensibility of transformation systems
* Strategies for ...
* Data-flow optimizations
* Partial evaluation
* Typechecking
* Compilation
* etc.
* Language-specific transformation systems
* C, C++, Java, XML, Haskell, Koala, ...
* Methods for design and development of transformation systems
* Tutorials
* Experience reports
---------------------------------------
FORMAT
The meeting has a workshop format with talks, but also plenty of time
will be reserved for discussions, code inspections, demonstrations, and
time to meet individually. A walk through the woods around the campus is
usually part of the deal as well.
Based on experiences from previous years, there are two types of
attendees; new Stratego programmers interested in a basic tutorial,
and advanced Stratego programmers and researchers interested in the
cutting edge. To accomodate both types, the 2006 meeting will consist of
a tutorial day and a technical program.
Tutorial
The tutorial day (on Monday) will consist of a basic introduction into
Stratego and XT in the morning, and a series of tutorial talks about
recent developments in the afternoon. Potential topics include
* Stratego language
* Rules and strategies
* Redesigned dynamic rules (including dependent dynamic rules)
* Architecture of transformation systems
* Language-specific libraries
* Transformation tool composition
It would be good to know well in advance who will attend the tutorial so
that we can adjust the material to the audience.
Technical Program
The other (one or) two days are intended for a technical program
consisting of 30 or 45 min talks about topics from the list above or
other topics of interest to the Stratego/XT community. These talks will
be accompanied by short papers (4 pages), which will be published in a
Utrecht University technical report.
---------------------------------------
CALL FOR CONTRIBUTIONS AND PARTICIPATION
We invite everyone interested in program transformation and Stratego/XT
to attend the meeting and possibly to make a contribution to the meeting
in the form of a talk or demonstration.
Contributions
If you would like to give a talk or demonstration please send a short
paper (at most 4 pages) to visser+sud05(a)cs.uu.nl before March 15 2004,
but preferably earlier. If you are in doubt whether a certain topic
would be of interest to the meeting, don't hesitate to get in touch via
the same email address.
Participation
>From Monday, May 2 to Wednesday, May 4, 2005 we meet at Utrecht
University so that everyone interested in Stratego/XT can get
up to date with current developments, and get an overview of ongoing
activities.
A fee to cover the expenses of coffee and lunch may be necessary.
Usually we go out for dinner at night, which is at your own expense.
Please register as soon as possible, but before April 1, 2005, so that
we can make reservations for room, lunch and dinner by sending an email
to visser+sud05(a)cs.uu.nl.
Important Dates
* Proposals for contributions: March 15, 2005
* Registration for attendance: April 1, 2005
* Meeting: May 2 - 4, 2005
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
PRELIMINARY LIST OF PRESENTATIONS
Language
* Dynamic Rules Refactored -- Eelco Visser
* AspectStratego -- Karl Trygve Kalleberg
Tools
* StrategoCore Compiler -- Eelco Visser
Applications
* The Stratego Octave Compiler -- Rob Vermaas
* Transforming Java Programs -- Martin Bravenboer
* JavaBorg Applications -- Rene de Groot
* Towards Transforming C -- Mart Kolthof
* Generating Publication Pages with BibTeX-Tools -- Eelco Visser
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
FIRST CALL FOR PAPERS
----------------------------------------------------------------------
4th International Conference on
Generative Programming and Component Engineering (GPCE'05)
Sep 29 - Oct 1, 2005, Tallinn (Estonia)
http://www.gpce.org/05
Sponsored by ACM SIGPLAN, in cooperation with ACM SIGSOFT
co-located with ICFP'05 and TFP'05
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Consult http://www.gpce.org/05 for UP-TO-DATE and DETAILED information,
including the full text of the calls for PAPERS and DEMONSTRATIONS,
and the calls for workshop and tutorial proposals.
APPROACHING: Deadline for WORKSHOP and TUTORIAL PROPOSALS
FORTHCOMING: web page for submission of papers and demos (early March)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
IMPORTANT DATES
* Feb 25, 2005: Submission of workshop and tutorial proposals
* Mar 18, 2005: Notification for workshop and tutorial proposals
* Apr 10, 2005: Submission of abstracts (only for papers)
* Apr 15, 2005: Submission of papers and demos
* May 30, 2005: Notification for papers and demos
* Sep 27-28, 2005: GPCE workshops and tutorials
* Sep 29 - Oct 1, 2005: GPCE papers and demos
----------------------------------------------------------------------
SCOPE. Generative and component approaches have the potential to
revolutionize software development in a similar way as automation and
components revolutionized manufacturing. Generative Programming
(developing programs that synthesize other programs), Component
Engineering (raising the level of modularization and analysis in
application design), and Domain-Specific Languages (elevating program
specifications to compact domain-specific notations that are easier to
write and maintain) are key technologies for automating program
development.
GPCE arose as a joint conference, merging the conference on Generative
and Component-Based Software Engineering (GCSE) and the workshop on
Semantics, Applications, and Implementation of Program Generation
(SAIG). The goal of GPCE is to provide a meeting place for researchers
and practitioners interested in cutting edge approaches to software
development. We aim to foster further cross-fertilization between the
software engineering research community and the programming languages
community, in addition to supporting the original research goals of
both the GCSE and the SAIG communities.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
TOPICS. GPCE seeks contributions both in software engineering and in
programming languages related (but not limited) to:
* Generative programming
- Reuse, meta-programming, partial evaluation, multi-stage and
multi-level languages, step-wise refinement
- Semantics, type systems, symbolic computation, linking and
explicit substitution, in-lining and macros, templates, program
transformation
- Runtime code generation, compilation, active libraries, synthesis
from specifications, development methods, generation of non-code
artifacts, formal methods, reflection
* Generative techniques for
- Product lines and architectures
- Embedded systems
- Model-driven architecture
* Component-based software engineering
- Reuse, distributed platforms, distributed systems, evolution,
analysis and design patterns, development methods, formal methods
* Integration of generative and component-based approaches
* Domain engineering and domain analysis
- Domain-specific languages (DSLs) including visual and UML-based DSLs
* Separation of concerns
- Aspect-oriented and feature-oriented programming,
- Intentional programming and multi-dimensional separation of concerns
* Industrial applications
----------------------------------------------------------------------
CALL FOR PAPERS. Authors are invited to submit a title and abstract
(by Apr 10) and a full paper (by Apr 15) reporting research results
and/or experience related to the topics above. We especially
encourage original high-quality reports on applications to real-world
problems, relating ideas and concepts from several topics, or bridging
the gap between theory and practice.
Simultaneous submission to other venues and submission of previously
published material are not allowed. Accepted papers will appear in
the conference proceedings, to be published in Springer's LNCS series.
SUBMISSION GUIDELINES. Electronic submission will be required (except
by special arrangement with the PC chairs). Submissions must be in
PDF, conform to the LNCS style, and be no longer than 15 PAGES. For
formatting details see http://www.springer.de/comp/lncs/authors.html.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
PROGRAM COMMITTEE
Chairs:
* Robert Glück (U. of Copenhagen)
* Michael Lowry (NASA)
Members:
* Don Batory (U. of Texas, USA)
* Ira Baxter (Semantic Designs)
* Cristiano Calcagno (Imperial College)
* Prem Devanbu (U. of California at Davis)
* Ulrich Eisenecker (U. of Leipzig)
* Tom Ellman (Vassar College)
* Robert Filman (NASA)
* Zhenjiang Hu (U. of Tokyo)
* Patricia Johann (Rutgers U.)
* John Launchbury (Galois)
* Anne-Françoise Le Meur (U. of Sci. and Tech. Lille)
* Hong Mei (Peking U.)
* Nicolas Rouquette (NASA)
* William Scherlis (CMU)
* Yannis Smaragdakis (Georgia Inst. of Tech.)
* Walid Taha (Rice U.)
* Todd Veldhuizen (Chalmers U. of Tech.)
ORGANIZING COMMITTEE
General Chair
* Eugenio Moggi (Genova U.)
Publicity Chair:
* Eelco Visser (Utrecht U.)
Workshops and Tutorials Chairs
* Jeff Gray (U. of Alabama at Birmingham)
* Andrew Malton (Waterloo U.)
Local Arrangements Chair
* Tarmo Uustalu (Inst. of Cybernetics, Tallinn)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
FIRST CALL FOR CONTRIBUTIONS
----------------------------------------------------------------------
4th International Conference on
Generative Programming and Component Engineering (GPCE'05)
Sep 29 - Oct 1, 2005, Tallinn (Estonia)
http://www.gpce.org/05
Sponsored by ACM SIGPLAN, in cooperation with ACM SIGSOFT
co-located with ICFP'05 and TFP'05
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Consult http://www.gpce.org/05 for UP-TO-DATE and DETAILED information
AVAILABLE: Calls for WORKSHOP and TUTORIAL PROPOSALS
FORTHCOMING: Calls for papers and demonstrations (by mid January)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
IMPORTANT DATES
* Feb 25, 2005: Submission of workshop and tutorial proposals
* Mar 18, 2005: Notification for workshop and tutorial proposals
* Apr 10, 2005: Submission of abstracts (only for papers)
* Apr 15, 2005: Submission of papers and demos
* May 30, 2005: Notification for papers and demos
* Sep 27-28, 2005: GPCE workshops and tutorials
* Sep 29 - Oct 1, 2005: GPCE papers and demos
----------------------------------------------------------------------
SCOPE. Generative and component approaches have the potential to
revolutionize software development in a similar way as automation and
components revolutionized manufacturing. Generative Programming
(developing programs that synthesize other programs), Component
Engineering (raising the level of modularization and analysis in
application design), and Domain-Specific Languages (elevating program
specifications to compact domain-specific notations that are easier to
write and maintain) are key technologies for automating program
development.
GPCE arose as a joint conference, merging the conference on
Generative and Component-Based Software Engineering (GCSE) and the
workshop on Semantics, Applications, and Implementation of Program
Generation (SAIG). The goal of GPCE is to provide a meeting place for
researchers and practitioners interested in cutting edge approaches to
software development. We aim to foster further cross-fertilization
between the software engineering research community
and the programming languages community, in addition to
supporting the original research goals of both the GCSE and the SAIG
communities.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
TOPICS. GPCE seeks contributions both in software engineering and in
programming languages related (but not limited) to:
* Generative programming
- Reuse, meta-programming, partial evaluation, multi-stage and
multi-level languages, step-wise refinement
- Semantics, type systems, symbolic computation, linking and
explicit substitution, in-lining and macros, templates, program
transformation
- Runtime code generation, compilation, active libraries, synthesis
from specifications, development methods, generation of non-code
artifacts, formal methods, reflection
* Generative techniques for
- Product lines and architectures
- Embedded systems
- Model-driven architecture
* Component-based software engineering
- Reuse, distributed platforms, distributed systems, evolution,
analysis and design patterns, development methods, formal methods
* Integration of generative and component-based approaches
* Domain engineering and domain analysis
- Domain-specific languages (DSLs) including visual and UML-based DSLs
* Separation of concerns
- Aspect-oriented and feature-oriented programming,
- Intentional programming and multi-dimensional separation of concerns
* Industrial applications
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Contributions to GPCE should belong to the following categories:
WORKSHOPS providing intensive collaborative environments, where
generative and component technologists meet to discuss (and solve)
challenging problems facing the field.
TUTORIALS giving a deeper or broader insight than conventional
lectures (they are expected to extend over a half or a full day).
Tutorials can be on any theme from or related to the topics above:
surveys, experience reports or specialized research topics. However,
a tutorial is expected to attract a reasonable number of participants
(at least 10).
PAPERS reporting research results and/or experience related to the
topics above (PC co-chairs can advise on appropriateness). We
especially encouraged original high-quality reports on applications to
real-world problems, relating ideas and concepts from several topics,
or bridging the gap between theory and practice.
DEMOS covering novel tools, techniques or ideas; work in progress; or
proven techniques used in real world scenarios. Demos will be
selected based on technical content, practical or academic relevance,
and their feasibility w.r.t. the infrastructure locally available.
Presentations must focus on the technical content (product marketing
would be inappropriate).
----------------------------------------------------------------------
ORGANIZATION
General Chair
* Eugenio Moggi (Genova University, Italy)
Program Committee Chairs
* Robert Glueck (University of Copenhagen, Denmark)
* Michael Lowry (NASA, USA)
Publicity Chair
* Eelco Visser (Utrecht University, The Netherlands)
Workshops and Tutorials Chairs
* Jeff Gray (University of Alabama at Birmingham, USA)
* Andrew Malton (Waterloo University, Canada)
Local Arrangements Chair
* Tarmo Uustalu (Institute of Cybernetics, Tallinn)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Call for Contributions and Participation
SIXTH STRATEGO USER DAYS (SUD'05)
May 2 - 4, 2005
Utrecht University
Utrecht, The Netherlands
http://www.stratego-language.org/Stratego/SixthStrategoUserDays
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
SCOPE
The Stratego User Days are a yearly meeting of Stratego/XT developers
and users. Topics include
* The state of the Stratego language and toolset
* Ongoing developments
* Plans and requirements for the future
* Development tools and implementation techniques for transformation systems
* Compilers, interpreters, documentation generation
* Transformation components and their composition
* Deployment issues
* Benchmarking transformations and transformed programs
* Extensibility of transformation systems
* Strategies for ...
* Data-flow optimizations
* Partial evaluation
* Typechecking
* Compilation
* etc.
* Language-specific transformation systems
* C, C++, Java, XML, Haskell, Koala, ...
* Methods for design and development of transformation systems
* Tutorials
* Experience reports
---------------------------------------
FORMAT
The meeting has a workshop format with talks, but also plenty of time
will be reserved for discussions, code inspections, demonstrations, and
time to meet individually. A walk through the woods around the campus is
usually part of the deal as well.
Based on experiences from previous years, there are two types of
attendees; new Stratego programmers interested in a basic tutorial,
and advanced Stratego programmers and researchers interested in the
cutting edge. To accomodate both types, the 2006 meeting will consist of
a tutorial day and a technical program.
Tutorial
The tutorial day (on Monday) will consist of a basic introduction into
Stratego and XT in the morning, and a series of tutorial talks about
recent developments in the afternoon. Potential topics include
* Stratego language
* Rules and strategies
* Redesigned dynamic rules (including dependent dynamic rules)
* Architecture of transformation systems
* Language-specific libraries
* Transformation tool composition
It would be good to know well in advance who will attend the tutorial so
that we can adjust the material to the audience.
Technical Program
The other (one or) two days are intended for a technical program
consisting of 30 or 45 min talks about topics from the list above or
other topics of interest to the Stratego/XT community. These talks will
be accompanied by short papers (4 pages), which will be published in a
Utrecht University technical report.
---------------------------------------
CALL FOR CONTRIBUTIONS AND PARTICIPATION
We invite everyone interested in program transformation and Stratego/XT
to attend the meeting and possibly to make a contribution to the meeting
in the form of a talk or demonstration.
Contributions
If you would like to give a talk or demonstration please send a short
paper (at most 4 pages) to visser+sud05(a)cs.uu.nl before March 15 2004,
but preferably earlier. If you are in doubt whether a certain topic
would be of interest to the meeting, don't hesitate to get in touch via
the same email address.
Participation
>From Monday, May 2 to Wednesday, May 4, 2005 we meet at Utrecht
University so that everyone interested in Stratego/XT can get
up to date with current developments, and get an overview of ongoing
activities.
A fee to cover the expenses of coffee and lunch may be necessary.
Usually we go out for dinner at night, which is at your own expense.
Please register as soon as possible, but before April 1, 2005, so that
we can make reservations for room, lunch and dinner by sending an email
to visser+sud05(a)cs.uu.nl.
Important Dates
* Proposals for contributions: March 15, 2005
* Registration for attendance: April 1, 2005
* Meeting: May 2 - 4, 2005
sorry i haven't replied on your message about a subtrack in sts. I'll mail you back first change i get in 2005.
thomas.
>Dear source transformation people,
>
>we are considering the option of arranging a Source Transformation
>Systems Workshop next year (2005), but we need a "hands-up" count, to
>see if the interest of another one this soon is there.
>
>GPCE'05 is in Tallin, Estonia, 29.9.-1.10.2005, and the workshop would
>be on 27.9.05 and/or on 28.9.05, see
> http://www.program-transformation.org/Gpce05/
>for the general GPCE05 information.
>Unfortunately these dates are very close to SCAM 2005,
> http://www.dcs.kcl.ac.uk/staff/mark/scam2005/
>which is in Budapest, Hungary, 30.9.-1.10.05. as part of ICSM2005
>(25.-30.9.2005).
>There are plenty of connections from Tallin to Hungary (not necessarily
>direct), so it is possible to participate in both a STS05 and SCAM05,
>but you will miss out on the main conferences if you do that.
>
>
>So please reply directly to me or to stsw04(a)ii.uib.no with an answer to
>the following questions:
>
>- Will you want to attend a STS05 as part og GPCE05 in Tallin?
>
>
>- Do you think the STS04 format should be repeated (short position
> papers and discussion sessions for a full day)?
>
>
>- Should we rather have full papers (rather than position papers)?
> If so, in the form of many short presentations or a few long ones?
>
>
>- Would you like the addition of 1-3 special themes sessions (up to 1/2
> day each) focusing on one of the many research questions?
> In this case, what themes do you see as most important?
>
>
>
>Please add comments and suggestions along with your other answers.
>The sooner you respond, the easier it will be to deside about STS05.
>
>
>Have a nice Christmas and a happy new year,
> Magne
>
>
>_______________________________________________
>sts mailing list
>sts(a)lists.urchin.earth.li
>http://urchin.earth.li/mailman/listinfo/sts
>
>
Dear source transformation people,
we are considering the option of arranging a Source Transformation
Systems Workshop next year (2005), but we need a "hands-up" count, to
see if the interest of another one this soon is there.
GPCE'05 is in Tallin, Estonia, 29.9.-1.10.2005, and the workshop would
be on 27.9.05 and/or on 28.9.05, see
http://www.program-transformation.org/Gpce05/
for the general GPCE05 information.
Unfortunately these dates are very close to SCAM 2005,
http://www.dcs.kcl.ac.uk/staff/mark/scam2005/
which is in Budapest, Hungary, 30.9.-1.10.05. as part of ICSM2005
(25.-30.9.2005).
There are plenty of connections from Tallin to Hungary (not necessarily
direct), so it is possible to participate in both a STS05 and SCAM05,
but you will miss out on the main conferences if you do that.
So please reply directly to me or to stsw04(a)ii.uib.no with an answer to
the following questions:
- Will you want to attend a STS05 as part og GPCE05 in Tallin?
- Do you think the STS04 format should be repeated (short position
papers and discussion sessions for a full day)?
- Should we rather have full papers (rather than position papers)?
If so, in the form of many short presentations or a few long ones?
- Would you like the addition of 1-3 special themes sessions (up to 1/2
day each) focusing on one of the many research questions?
In this case, what themes do you see as most important?
Please add comments and suggestions along with your other answers.
The sooner you respond, the easier it will be to deside about STS05.
Have a nice Christmas and a happy new year,
Magne
Hi,
thanks to the upload efforts of Ganesh Sittampalam, the proceedings and
most of the slides from the Source Transformation Systems Workshop 2004
(STS04) are now online at
http://www.program-transformation.org/Sts/STS04
Enjoy!
Magne
At the STS workshop we had quite a discussion about dynamic rules after
a presentation which I had not intended to be about that subject. If
you want to find out all about the idea, I recommend the following two
recent papers, which cover the design and illustrate it with many
examples. The first paper gives a complete overview of dynamic rules,
including scope labels, extended dynamic rules, and union and
intersection of rulesets. The second paper extends these basic dynamic
rules with `dependent' dynamic rules.
You can find preprints on my publication page
http://www.cs.uu.nl/groups/ST/Visser/PublicationsByYear
or at the Stratego site http://www.stratego-language.org Comments or
even discussion are welcome of course.
cheers,
-- Eelco
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Martin Bravenboer, Arthur van Dam, Karina Olmos and Eelco Visser.
Program Transformation with Scoped Dynamic Rewrite Rules. Special issue
on Program Transformation of Fundamenta Informaticae (Conditionally
accepted November 2004).
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Abstract
The applicability of term rewriting to program transformation is limited
by the lack of control over rule application and by the context-free
nature of rewrite rules. The first problem is addressed by languages
supporting user-definable rewriting strategies. The second problem is
addressed by the extension of rewriting strategies with scoped dynamic
rewrite rules. Dynamic rules are defined at run-time and can access
variables available from their definition context. Rules defined within
a rule scope are automatically retracted at the end of that scope. In
this paper we explore the design space of dynamic rules, their
application to transformation problems, and their implementation. The
technique is formally defined by extending the operational semantics
underlying the program transformation language Stratego, and illustrated
by means of several program tranformations in Stratego, including
constant propagation, bound variable renaming, dead code elimination,
function inlining, and function specialization.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Karina Olmos and Eelco Visser. Composing Source-to-Source Data-Flow
Transformations with Rewriting Strategies and Dependent Dynamic Rewrite
Rules. In R. Bodik, 14th International Conference on Compiler
Construction (CC'05). Edinburgh, April 2005. (Accepted for publication)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Abstract
Data-flow transformations used in optimizing compilers are also useful
in other programming tools such as code generators, aspect weavers,
domain- and application-specific optimizers, and refactoring tools.
These applications require source-to-source transformations rather than
transformations on a low-level intermediate representation.
In this paper we describe the composition of source-to-source data-flow
transformations in the program transformation language Stratego. The
language supports the high-level specification of transformations by
means of rewriting strategy combinators that allow a natural modeling of
data- and control-flow without committing to a specific source language.
Data-flow facts are propagated using dynamic rewriting rules. In
particular, we introduce the concept of dependent dynamic rewrite rules,
for modeling the dependencies of data-flow facts on program entitities
such as variables. The approach supports the combination of analysis and
transformation, the combination of multiple transformations, the
combination with other types of transformations, and the correct
treatment of variable binding constructs and lexical scope to avoid
variable capture.
--
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Eelco Visser Institute of Information and Computing Sciences
mail:visser@cs.uu.nl Universiteit Utrecht
or:visser@acm.org P.O. Box 80089, 3508 TB Utrecht, The Netherlands
http://www.cs.uu.nl/~visser/ Phone: +31-30-253 4592 Fax: +31-30-251 3791
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hello!
At the STS workshop at OOPSLA, I mentioned the LDTA workshop which will
be held in Edinburgh April 3.
The deadline for submissions is Dec 1. Please see the link below for
more information. I hope many of you will consider submitting to the
workshop.
best regards,
Görel Hedin
******************************************************************
*** CALL FOR PAPERS
***
*** Fifth Workshop on
*** Language Descriptions, Tools and Applications
*** LDTA 2005
***
*** Satellite event of ETAPS 2005
*** April 3, 2005
*** Edinburgh, Scotland, UK
***
*** http://www-i2.informatik.rwth-aachen.de/Events/LDTA2005/
******************************************************************
The gpce-announce mailinglist is a moderated list intended for
announcements about the conference on Generative Programming and
Component Engineering and other announcements of interest to the GPCE
community.
See http://www.gpce.org for more information about GPCE.
To subscribe to the mailinglist visit
https://mail.cs.uu.nl/mailman/listinfo/gpce-announce
cheers,
-- Eelco
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Eelco Visser Institute of Information and Computing Sciences
mail:visser@cs.uu.nl Universiteit Utrecht
or:visser@acm.org P.O. Box 80089, 3508 TB Utrecht, The Netherlands
http://www.cs.uu.nl/~visser/ Phone: +31-30-253 4592 Fax: +31-30-251 3791
------------------------------------------------------------------------